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Startup Name Placeholder Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A startup name placeholder generator solves a small but persistent design problem: no one wants to stare at 'Company Name Here' in a Figma frame or pitch deck template. Realistic coined names like 'Velorix' or 'Draftlo' make layouts feel finished, so clients and stakeholders evaluate the actual design instead of the gap where content should go. The tool generates batches of up to dozens of names at once. Three naming styles cover the main use cases: tech-style names use short syllables, vowel drops, and suffixes like -ly, -io, and -hub; consumer names are warmer and more pronounceable; abstract names suit fintech or biotech contexts where invented vocabulary signals ambition. Swap styles mid-project when a template needs to show several distinct fictional brands.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Set the 'Number of Names' field to how many placeholder startup names your mockup needs.
- Select a naming style — choose 'tech' for SaaS contexts, or switch styles for consumer or abstract brand feels.
- Click Generate to produce a fresh list of fictional startup names styled to your selection.
- Scan the list and regenerate any time a name feels too close to a real brand you recognize.
- Copy your chosen names directly into Figma, PowerPoint, or your prototyping tool as placeholder brand identities.
Use Cases
- •Populating a 20-slide pitch deck template with distinct fictional startup brands across every slide
- •Filling Figma SaaS landing page hero sections with believable product names before client handoff
- •Building app store screenshot mockups in Sketch that need a convincing app name in the nav bar
- •Stress-testing a reusable Webflow template with short and long name variants to catch layout breaks
- •Assembling a startup competition microsite demo with five or six placeholder company entrants
Tips
- →Generate names in two or three different style settings and mix them — varied naming conventions make a multi-brand template look more realistic.
- →For pitch deck templates, favor names with two to three syllables; they fit cleanly in header typography without forcing awkward line breaks.
- →Deliberately pick names of different character lengths from the batch to stress-test how your layout handles short versus long brand names.
- →Pair each generated name with a fake domain pattern (get[name].com or [name].io) to make header and nav mockups instantly more credible.
- →Avoid names ending in common real suffixes like '-ify' or '-ble' if your mockup client works in a space where those are competitors — it creates unnecessary confusion.
- →Build a personal swipe file by saving your favorite batches across sessions; a bank of 30 to 50 vetted placeholder names speeds up every future template project.
FAQ
why use a fake startup name instead of just typing 'company name' in a mockup
Generic placeholder text signals incompleteness and pulls reviewers out of the design. A coined name like 'Spherient' keeps the illusion intact so feedback stays focused on layout and hierarchy, not missing content. It also helps when presenting templates to stakeholders who struggle to visualise finished work from placeholder copy.
can I use a generated startup name for a real company or product
You can use any name as a starting point, but treat it as a lead, not a final answer. Before committing, check the USPTO trademark database, verify domain availability, and search within your specific NICE classification — coined words can still collide with existing marks in your industry.
what's the difference between the tech, consumer, and abstract naming styles
Tech names lean on SaaS conventions: short syllables, dropped vowels, and suffixes like -ly, -io, or -hub. Consumer names are warmer and more syllabic, fitting wellness, DTC, or lifestyle apps. Abstract names carry no obvious root word, which works well in fintech or biotech contexts where invented vocabulary implies innovation.